Read The Penguin Book of Card Games: Everything You Need to Know to Play Over 250 Games Online
Authors: David Parlett
eight highest trumps, known col ectively as Wenz or Wenzel,
ranking downwards as fol ows:
Q Q Q Q J J J J
In suits, the order is A-T-K-9-8-7. If there is a trump suit, it
contains 14 cards, headed by the eight Wenzels and fol owed by the
other six of the specified suit – which, in a partnership bid, is
always hearts.
Note that Wenzels normal y belong not to the suits marked on
their faces but to the trump suit, whatever that may be.
Object One player undertakes to capture in tricks cards total ing at
least 61 of the 120 card-points available, and wil get a bonus for
taking 90 or more (schneider), or winning al eight tricks (schwarz).
In the simplest bid he at empts this with the aid of a temporary
partner. In higher bids, he plays solo against the other three, and is
then entitled to vary the trump suit.
Contracts From lowest to highest, the contracts that may be bid are
as fol ows.
1. Cal -Ace. Queens, Jacks and hearts are trumps, and the bidder
finds a partner by naming the Ace of a suit other than hearts.
Of that suit he must himself hold at least one card, other than
the Queen, Jack, or Ace. Whoever holds it becomes his
partner, but must not announce this fact until it is revealed by
the play.
This is the only partnership contract. It cannot be bid by a
player holding al three non-trump Aces, orno card ofthe
cal ed suit. However, some schools al ow a player to cal the
Ace of a void suit provided that he announces ‘Void’ when
doing so. The next higher bids are al solos.
2. Wenz. Only the four Jacks are trumps, ranking in their normal
order (
), and forming a fifth suit of their own. Queens
rank between the Kings and Nines of their nominal suits.
3. Suit Solo. The soloist nominates a trump suit, which, headed
3. Suit Solo. The soloist nominates a trump suit, which, headed
by al eight Wenzels, forms a series of 14 trumps. He himself,
however, may not hold any trumps apart from Wenzels
(otherwise it is too easy).
4. Wenz-Tout. Same as Wenz (only Jacks trump), but the soloist
must win al eight tricks.
5. Solo-Tout. As solo, with Queens, Jacks, and a specified trump
suit, but the soloist must win al eight tricks. (The bid is
usual y announced and known as Du, literal y ‘thou’, but
punning on the French words tout, meaning ‘al ’, or atout,
meaning ‘trump’.)
6. Sie. Same as Solo-Tout, but announced in the rare event of the
soloist’s having been dealt al eight Wenzels. (Sie is another
piece of word-play, being the ‘polite’ equivalent of Du.)
Bidding procedure Each in turn, starting with eldest, says ‘Pass’ or
‘Play’. If al pass, the deal is annul ed and passes on. If only one
player says ‘Play’, he either cal s an Ace or declares a higher
contract. If a second bidder says ‘Me too’, he is automatical y
making a solo bid on the assumption that the first to speak was
seeking a partner. The competing bidders must then state what
contract they wish to play, and whoever bids highest becomes the
soloist. If two or more wish to play the same solo contract, priority
goes to the eldest of them – that is, the player entitled to speak first
in each round of bidding. (In competing suit-solo bids, al suits are
equal. Priority is stil determined by position, not by suit.)
Doubling An opponent who thinks the contract can be beaten may
double (by announcing ‘Kontra’) at any time before the second card
is played to the first trick. This increases the game value, but
obliges his side to take at least 61 in order to beat the contract.
(The soloist would then need only 60 to win.) The soloist – or his
partner, if any – may in turn redouble; in which case they must
again make 61. Some circles impose no limit on doubles,
redoubles, etc., but whichever side doubled last must always make
61 or more to win.